Early interceptions, Brady's three TDs help Pats roll

FOXBORO, Massachusetts (Ticker) - Outside of a late lapse, the
New England Patriots continue to manhandle their opponents.

Taking advantage of three first-half interceptions, Tom Brady
and the Patriots built a sizeable halftime lead before posting a
34-17 victory over the Cleveland Browns at Gillette Stadium on
Sunday.

Although first-time starter Derek Anderson came in leading the
Browns to two wins in their last three games, he was intercepted
twice by Junior Seau in the opening half. It was the first two
interceptions for the veteran linebacker since 2002.

"It's the name of the game," Seau said. "Obviously, you go out
there and want to perform well and stop the run and get them
into a passing situation. Whenever you make big plays like we
did today, it definitely leans in our favor and offense took
care of the rest."

Cornerback Asante Samuel had an interception and forced another
one in the first half, as New England (5-0) took advantage of
the turnovers to race to a 20-0 lead.

"It was big, especially the one in the end zone," Patriots coach
Bill Belichick said. "That was obviously a big play. We were
able to get (four) of them. Turnovers, field position, it's
always important and we all know the stats that go with those
turnovers."

Brady threw three touchdown passes, completing 22-of-38 passes
for 265 yards, and tying an NFL record in the process. Brady
joined Steve Young as the only quarterbacks to throw at least
three TDs in five consecutive games to begin a season.

Young accomplished the feat for San Francisco in 1998.

"Those four turnovers (were) all critical plays of the game,"
Brady said. "Offensively, we had the ball in a short field a
bunch (and) couldn't really get it in the red area like we were
wanting to.

"We had a few three-and-outs that weren't very good, some missed
opportunities in the passing game. But I think everybody is
happy we won and to be 5-0, you can't be much better than that
at this point in the year."

The loss spoiled the homecoming of Cleveland coach Romeo Crennel
and linebacker Willie McGinest, both of whom played key roles
in bringing Super Bowl titles to New England.

Crennel is in his third season as the Browns coach after serving
as the Patriots' defensive coordinator from 2001-04.

"We came up and played a good football team today here at their
place and we didn't do enough things to win the game," Crennel
said. "We had a good first drive, drove it all the way down
into great scoring position and come up with no points and I
think that hurt us in the first half and set a tone for the
first half."

McGinest, a linebacker, spent his first 12 seasons of his career
with New England before signing with Cleveland in 2006.

"Coming back, but who wants to come back to a whooping,"
McGinest said. "It's good to be back and see some of the old
faces, coaches and players. I just wish we would have played
better."

With New England leading just 3-0 and Cleveland threatening to
take the lead at the 1-yard line, Samuel tipped a pass from
Anderson on 3rd-and-goal. The ball was hauled in by Seau,
ending the Cleveland threat.

"We were in zone coverage and I had a guy going to the flat and
I saw that someone had taken him, so I just zoned up and started
reading the quarterback and I tipped the ball, which I should
have caught, and Junior made a good play," Samuel said.

"It didn't get batted," Anderson added. "I just made a poor
decision, threw it across my body. The guy came off the
receiver in the flat and made a pick."

Samuel added his own interception with 2:33 remaining in the
first, giving the Patriots the ball at the Browns' 34-yard-line.
On the next play, Brady found Donte Stallworth in the left
flat, with the receiver breaking free of the grips of Leigh
Bodden and racing into the end zone for his first score for a
10-0 lead.

"You just go out and play and wait on your opportunity,"
Stallworth said. "Today, I got a little more opportunity
because they were trying to take Randy (Moss) out of the game."

Cleveland (2-3) did not break through until midway through the
third quarter on Phil Dawson's 42-yard field goal.

Early in the fourth, Anderson, who was 22-of-43 for 287 yards,
found Tim Carter down the left sideline for a 21-yard diving
touchdown, cutting the deficit to 20-10.

But Brady responded, engineering a nine-play, 71-yard drive that
was capped off by a 25-yard TD to wide-open tight end Ben
Watson.

It was the second touchdown of the day for Watson, who finished
with a career-high 107 yards on six receptions.

"The defense played great," Watson said. "They got us turnovers
to set us up. They got a fumble recovery and scored. They
played a great game. They set us up a lot with a short field."

The Browns made another charge, closing within 27-17 when
Anderson found tight end Kellen Winslow for a 14-yard TD with
5:56 remaining.

However, Winslow was stripped off the ball on Cleveland's
ensuing possession by cornerback Randall Gay, who raced 15 yards
for a touchdown with 42 seconds left to seal the scoring.

"We threw some turnovers," Crennel said. "They intercepted some
balls in good field position, and when you give Tom Brady good
field position, he is going to hurt you. Sometimes when you give
him bad field position, he is going to hurt you."

In addition to the three interceptions, Anderson was sacked
three times, including twice by Tedy Bruschi. The Patriots'
defensive captain now has 30 1/2 sacks in his career.

New England safety Rodney Harrison played but did not start in
his first game since serving an NFL-mandated four-game
suspension for admitted HGH use.